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SYMBOL
LAST
BID
ASK
HIGH
LOW
NET CHG.
%CHG.
SPREAD
SPX
S&P 500 Index
6870.39
6870.39
6870.39
6895.79
6858.28
+13.27
+ 0.19%
--
DJI
Dow Jones Industrial Average
47954.98
47954.98
47954.98
48133.54
47871.51
+104.05
+ 0.22%
--
IXIC
NASDAQ Composite Index
23578.12
23578.12
23578.12
23680.03
23506.00
+72.99
+ 0.31%
--
USDX
US Dollar Index
98.900
98.980
98.900
98.960
98.730
-0.050
-0.05%
--
EURUSD
Euro / US Dollar
1.16511
1.16518
1.16511
1.16717
1.16341
+0.00085
+ 0.07%
--
GBPUSD
Pound Sterling / US Dollar
1.33213
1.33223
1.33213
1.33462
1.33136
-0.00099
-0.07%
--
XAUUSD
Gold / US Dollar
4204.20
4204.61
4204.20
4218.85
4190.61
+6.29
+ 0.15%
--
WTI
Light Sweet Crude Oil
59.259
59.289
59.259
60.084
59.247
-0.550
-0.92%
--

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Ukraine President Zelenskiy: No Accord So Far On Eastern Ukraine In US Talks

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NATO: Ukrainian President Zelenskiy Will Meet NATO's Rutte And EU Commission Chief Von Der Leyen And Costa In Brussels On Monday

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China Finance Ministry: To Reopen 119 Billion Yuan 10-Year Bonds On Dec 12

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Sudan's Paramilitary RSF Say They Controlled Oil-Rich Area Of Heglig In Kordofan

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German Government Spokesperson: We See Russia As A Threat To Our Security

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Thai Army Chief Of Staff: Thailand Seeking To Cripple Cambodia's Military Capability

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German Government Spokesperson: We Reject Criticism Of Europe In New US National Security Strategy

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Ivory Coast 2025/26 Cocoa Arrivals Reached 803000 T By December 7 Versus 820000 T A Year Ago - Exporters' Estimate

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EU To Delay Proposals For Automotive Sector, Including Co2 Emissions, To Dec 16, Draft EU Commission Document Shows

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Kremlin: India Buys Energy Where It Is Profitable To And As Far As We Understand They Will Continue To Do That

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Turkey's Main Banking Index Up 2.5%

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Turkey's Main BIST-100 Index Up 1.9%

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Hungary's Preliminary November Budget Balance Huf -403 Billion

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Indian Rupee Down 0.1% At 90.07 Per USA Dollar As Of 3:30 P.M. Ist, Previous Close 89.98

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India's Nifty 50 Index Provisionally Ends 0.96% Lower

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[JPMorgan: US Stock Rally May Stagnate Following Fed Rate Cut] JPMorgan Strategists Say The Recent Rally In US Stocks May Stall As Investors Take Profits Following The Anticipated Fed Rate Cut. The Market Currently Predicts A 92% Probability Of The Fed Lowering Borrowing Costs On Wednesday. Expectations Of A Rate Cut Have Continued To Rise, Fueled By Positive Signals From Policymakers In Recent Weeks. "Investors May Be More Inclined To Lock In Gains At The End Of The Year Rather Than Increase Directional Exposure," Mislav Matejka's Team Wrote In A Report

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Euro Zone Sentix Investor Confidence Index (Dec)

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Russian Defence Ministry: Russian Forces Take Control Of Novodanylivka In Ukraine's Zaporizhzhia Region

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Russian Defence Ministry: Russian Forces Take Control Of Chervone In Ukraine's Donetsk Region

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French Finance Ministry: Government Started Process To Block Temporarily Shein Platform

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          China’s support for Tehran grows more restrained as U.S. enters war between Israel and Iran

          Adam

          Economic

          Middle East Situation

          Summary:

          China maintains cautious support for Iran amid U.S. strikes, balancing strategic ties with economic interests. While condemning U.S. actions, Beijing avoids escalation, eyeing global disruption that may weaken Western rivals.


          As the U.S. rained bombs and missiles on Iran’s nuclear sites on Saturday — entering the war between Israel and Iran — Beijing appears to be standing firm in its support of its long-standing ally in Tehran.
          However, its support will likely be tempered by its limited heft as a peace broker in the region, and the perceived upside if oil chokepoints squeeze the U.S. more than it hurts Beijing, experts said.
          Beijing has drawn closer to Iran in recent years, with the two countries cooperating regularly on military exercises and signing a 25-year strategic partnership in economic, military and security cooperation in 2021.
          Iran’s population of nearly 91 million, far more than Israel’s 9.8 million people, coupled with its abundant crude oil reserves, made it a natural partner in China’s Belt and Road initiative, which the Global Times, a Beijing government mouthpiece, described as a way to “counter U.S. hegemony.”
          China’s primary economic interest, however, lies in its access to Iranian oil and the Strait of Hormuz, one of the most pivotal routes for global crude oil flows.
          Some 20 million barrels per day of crude oil, or a fifth of global consumption, flowed through the strait in 2024, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration. About half of Beijing’s oil imports moved through the key route — using a system of workarounds to bypass Western banks, shipping services and yuan-denominated transactions to avoid triggering sanctions.
          That said, China will likely keep its “hands off Iran in any case,” said Neo Wang, lead China economist and strategist at Evercore ISI, due to its limited influence over Israel and its strategic calculus on Washington’s involvement in the conflict.
          Beijing, embroiled in a trade war with the U.S., may find value in any chaos in the Middle East, as they would pose “a bigger distraction to Washington,” Wang added.
          China had pledged to support Iran shortly after Israel’s attack on June 12, which Beijing condemned as a “violation of Iran’s sovereignty, security and territorial integrity.”
          But despite that initial show of support for Iran, Beijing’s rhetoric has shifted to become more measured, short of denouncing Israel’s military actions but focused on brokering dialogue and a ceasefire.
          Chinese foreign minister Wang Yi told his Israeli counterpart in a phone call that Israel’s strikes were “unacceptable,” but refrained from remarks of “condemning” them in the call.
          Beijing has largely avoided “direct condemnation of Israel while remaining diplomatically aligned with Iran,” analysts at political risk consultancy firm Eurasia Group said, as it seeks to “contain the tensions and prevent spillover of the conflict to the wider region — which could affect its economic and strategic interests.”
          The U.S. strikes on Iran “handed China an important talking point: It’s America, not China, that threatens the global order and peace,” said Shehzad Qazi, managing director of China Beige Book.
          A battle of endurance?
          U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio on Sunday called for China to dissuade Iran from closing the Strait of Hormuz.
          While many expect Beijing to do just that, some suggested a blockade of the chokepoint could be favorable for China, as it stands better prepared to absorb the blow than the U.S. and European Union, and that China could easily turn to other alternative oil sources.
          According to the Energy Information Administration, China’s primary oil sources are Russia, Saudi Arabia, Malaysia, Iraq and Oman, although a sizable portion of Malaysia’s exports are actually relabeled or transferred from Iran.
          Robin Brooks, senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, said “China will be happy to see a big spike in oil prices if that destabilizes the U.S. and Europe.”
          Echoing that view, Andrew Bishop, global head of policy research at Signum Global Advisors, said: “China may not be that irate at paying more for oil from other sources, if it means the U.S. suffers even more.”
          Answering a question on Iran’s potential closure of the strait, a Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson told reporters at a regular briefing Monday that it is in the international community’s shared interest to maintain stability in the Persian Gulf and surrounding waterways.
          Iran’s parliament Sunday backed the decision to close the strait, pending the final approval by its national security council.
          Opportunity in crisis
          China may have hopes of acting as a peacemaker, building on its mediation of a peace deal between Iran and Saudi Arabia in 2023. But Israel will likely be skeptical of China’s neutrality as a mediator, analysts said, citing Beijing’s close ties with Iran and concerns about of provoking the Trump administration.
          China’s U.N. Ambassador Cong Fu took aim at the U.S. at a U.N. Security Council meeting on Sunday, saying that the country “strongly condemns” the U.S. attacks on Iran and the bombing of nuclear facilities.
          Fu also singled out Israel and called for efforts to bring an end to the hostilities. “The parties to the conflict, Israel in particular, should reach an immediate ceasefire to prevent a spiraling escalation,” Fu said, according to the readout.
          Andy Rothman, founder of advisory firm Sinology LLC, said he doubted that Beijing would attempt to broker a peace deal between the U.S. and Iran, but it may still be “discouraging Iran from retaliating militarily against the U.S.”
          “Because that would destabilize the region and weaken the global economy, neither of which are in China’s interest,” he added.
          Source: cnbc
          To stay updated on all economic events of today, please check out our Economic calendar
          Risk Warnings and Disclaimers
          You understand and acknowledge that there is a high degree of risk involved in trading. Following any strategies or investment methods may lead to potential losses. The content on the site is provided by our contributors and analysts for information purposes only. You are solely responsible for determining whether any trading assets, securities, strategy, or any other product is suitable for investing based on your own investment objectives and financial situation.
          Add to Favorites
          Share

          Strait of Hormuz saber-rattling ramps up following US attack. Whether the key waterway will close is less clear.

          Adam

          Economic

          Middle East Situation

          Iran's parliament has pushed the nation to close the Strait of Hormuz, according to state media, but left the final decision to choke off the key waterway to Iran’s Supreme National Security Council.
          Vice President JD Vance shot back Sunday that such an action "would be suicidal" for Iran as "their entire economy runs through the Strait of Hormuz."
          Yet the Islamic Republic appears to be a step closer to the unprecedented action that could spike prices around the world, with about 20% of global oil and gas flowing through the narrow passageway connecting the Persian Gulf to the rest of the globe.
          It was just one front — but perhaps one with the greatest economic consequences — after President Trump ordered an attack on three of Iran's nuclear sites and drew the US into the ongoing war.
          Some experts are skeptical Iran will ever follow through, as the country has threatened the strait multiple times over the years but has historically opted for less disruptive measures.
          Trump described the move as a means to bring Iran to the negotiating table in comments Saturday night. But it immediately set off fears of additional violence and retaliation in the days ahead, with Trump's hint at the possibility of "regime change" a further spur.
          For their part, Iranian leaders say any talks are on hold but haven't outlined exactly how they are going to respond.
          "The US is not diplomatic and only understands the language of force and threats," said Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, according to Mehr News, the country's semi-official news agency.
          Araghchi also reportedly avoided directly commenting on the strait, saying "a variety of options are available to Iran."
          The action also comes after Iranian General Mohsen Rezaei, an Iranian leader who has a seat on the decision-making Supreme National Security Council, reportedly said on state television hours before the attack that the country would move to close the strait if Trump entered the war.
          Watching for a ‘worst-case scenario’
          Economists will be closely watching the strait because of global economic repercussions that would almost surely follow any disruptions there.
          Analysts at JPMorgan Chase (JPM) have called a blockage there a "worst-case scenario" and suggested the result could be global oil prices reaching $120 a barrel and pushing inflation in the US to 5%.
          But as Bloomberg energy columnist Javier Blas reemphasized over the weekend, it benefits Iran to "use low-ranking officials to talk about closing Hormuz" because it sows instability. But it would actually damage Iran to follow through.
          Indeed, closing the strait would be felt in Iran's own oil sector and cut off a key revenue source for the country's leaders.
          Iran uses the waterway for its own energy exports, which totaled over 1.3 million barrels of oil a day in 2023, according to CEIC.
          As Noam Raydan, who studies energy and maritime risks at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, told Yahoo Finance last week before the attacks: "If its oil production and terminals are badly damaged, we can then seriously consider the possibility of Tehran shutting the strait."
          So far, that doesn't appear to be the case, with Israel striking one oil refinery in Tehran but so far apparently leaving the country's oil infrastructure largely in place.
          Most Iranian oil flows to China, but closing the Strait of Hormuz would jeopardize a wider array of oil and natural gas sources, with Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Iraq, and others using that waterway.
          That said, the tensions could prompt oil tankers to decide not to transit Hormuz themselves without direct intervention from Iran. But there were signs of a cautious willingness to enter the waterway on Monday, as two supertankers that had U-turned resumed their crossing.
          The overall landscape has led Trump administration to express tempered confidence that the Strait of Hormuz option is one that won't be taken.
          "That would be suicidal," Vance said on Sunday on NBC of Iran taking that step.
          "If they want to destroy their own economy and cause disruptions in the world, I think that would be their decision," he acknowledged, "but why would they do that? I don't think it makes any sense."
          Secretary of State Marco Rubio added on Fox News that Iran closing the strait would be "another terrible mistake, ... and we retain options to deal with that."

          Source: finance.yahoo

          To stay updated on all economic events of today, please check out our Economic calendar
          Risk Warnings and Disclaimers
          You understand and acknowledge that there is a high degree of risk involved in trading. Following any strategies or investment methods may lead to potential losses. The content on the site is provided by our contributors and analysts for information purposes only. You are solely responsible for determining whether any trading assets, securities, strategy, or any other product is suitable for investing based on your own investment objectives and financial situation.
          Add to Favorites
          Share

          Tesla stock pops 10% as Musk touts ‘successful’ robotaxi Austin launch

          Adam

          Stocks

          Economic

          Tesla’s driverless robotaxi finally hit the road this weekend, sending shares of the electric vehicle maker up 10% on Monday.
          The EV giant debuted autonomous rides in Austin, Texas, on Sunday, opening the service to a limited number of riders by invitation only. CEO Elon Musk said in a post on social media platform X that customers were charged a flat fee of $4.20.
          “Super congratulations to the @Tesla_AI software & chip design teams on a successful @Robotaxi launch!! Culmination of a decade of hard work. Both the AI chip and software teams were built from scratch within Tesla,” he said in a post.
          One tester wrote on X that they did 11 with the service with “zero issues.” Musk reposted numerous firsthand encounters with the services.
          Musk has long promised a driverless Tesla robotaxi fleet to investors, amping up the pressure to deliver.
          The launch puts Tesla head-to-head with Alphabet’s Waymo, which is already operating a fleet of robotaxis in several cities across the U.S. and reached 10 million trips last month.
          Musk told CNBC’s David Faber last month that Tesla aims to have “Hundreds of thousands, if not over a million” self-driving cars in the U.S. by the end of next year. In May, Musk first announced plans to launch the service in Austin, with later debuts set for Los Angeles and San Francisco.
          Heading into the launch, Tesla faced pushback from a group of Democratic lawmakers in Texas and public safety activists urged the company to delay the debut.
          Tesla’s full-self driving capabilities, which feature a standard FSD or FSD supervised, include automatic steering and parking, but have been linked to accidents and fatalities, according to data tracked by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.

          Source: cnbc

          To stay updated on all economic events of today, please check out our Economic calendar
          Risk Warnings and Disclaimers
          You understand and acknowledge that there is a high degree of risk involved in trading. Following any strategies or investment methods may lead to potential losses. The content on the site is provided by our contributors and analysts for information purposes only. You are solely responsible for determining whether any trading assets, securities, strategy, or any other product is suitable for investing based on your own investment objectives and financial situation.
          Add to Favorites
          Share

          Missiles Fly, Yet Bitcoin Holds, Revealing BTC’s Strength in Global Chaos

          Warren Takunda

          Cryptocurrency

          Middle East Situation

          On Saturday, June 21, 2025, the US hit Iranian nuclear facilities, causing a short-lived dip in the price action of Bitcoin. Bitcoin rebounded before its Sunday close to just under 1.27% of its price before the US military effort.
          For 10 days in June, missiles flew and markets wobbled, but Bitcoin held its ground — not immune to war, but more stable than fear would suggest.
          It is within human nature to want to find patterns, but correlation does not necessarily mean causation. Looking at the headlines, it is easy to assume that things are moving because of one news story or the next. Israel hits Iran. Iran strikes back. The United States drops 30,000-pound bunker busters. Bitcoin drifts lower to $98,286, and the headlines scream correlation.
          Looking closer, however, the drawdown was orderly. No panic. No wipeout. And by the time the dust settled, Bitcoin had closed the week still above six figures at $100,760. The most severe military escalation in the region in years moved the asset just 1.27% in 24 hours. That is not a crisis. That is a market taking the news like it takes the weather.
          Whether someone is a trader, a hodler or someone new to the cryptoverse, deciphering the effect of global headlines on Bitcoin’s price action can help separate the signal from the noise, and clarify what moves the market in both the short and long term.Missiles Fly, Yet Bitcoin Holds, Revealing BTC’s Strength in Global Chaos_1

          Bitcoin Price Action vs Iran-Israel Conflict Headlines (June 12-22, 2025). Source: AP, and CoinMarketCap

          The conflict, the charts and the causality trap

          Sentiment is important to risk assets like Bitcoin, and BTC’s price action has been affected by the recent conflict in the Middle East. Famous gold bug and anti-Bitcoiner Peter Schiff asked on X on Sunday, “Other than [Michael Saylor], who’s buying the dip below $100K?” While BTC’s price dropped to almost $98K, there was enough market response to support going back above that psychological six-figure mark by the day’s close.
          BTC and its USD trading price constantly fluctuate, and it is in this range that we can glean the most insight. When looking at the highs and lows of BTC price action from June 12 through Sunday, we can see that Bitcoin’s price closed above the range of lows for that day, showing signs of support at that current level, even if there was a multiday downward trend.
          A downward trend makes sense when considering that the 200-day moving average for BTC is around $95,567. A 200 DMA is a key long-term trend indicator that often provides market support and resistance levels for assets if the price dips drastically in the short term.
          Bitcoin does show movement in response to news about political conflicts. Still, it often finds stability rather quickly, and in a longer time frame, other headlines may have more of an effect on BTC’s price volatility.

          Macro still holds the wheel

          Going back to the start of 2025 and looking for headlines that moved the crypto market medium-term, we can find that the macro-news headlines from the United States seem to show more of a correlation than the recent Iran-Israel conflict. One of the largest BTC price escalations was the swearing in of US President Donald Trump on Jan. 20, with the price declining in the days to follow without an official word on the crypto industry.
          On Feb. 12, the Consumer Price Index (CPI) rose to 3.0% and core CPI to 3.3%, reinforcing the Federal Reserve’s rate pause. On March 19, the Fed cut its GDP forecast to 1.7%, raised its unemployment projection to 4.4%, and raised its inflation expectations. On April 4, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell warned that new tariffs could raise inflation and slow growth. On April 10, CPI fell to 2.3%, helping spark hopes of rate cuts. On May 13, CPI remained at 2.3%, but core inflation stayed sticky at 2.8%. On May 30, Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) dropped to 2.1%, and core PCE to 2.5%. During the Iran–Israel conflict, on June 11, CPI came in at 2.4%, and on June 12, the Producer Price Index (PPI) printed at 0.2%.
          On Tuesday and Wednesday, the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) held interest rates steady but lowered the GDP forecast to 1.4% and raised inflation projections to 3%. This flurry of macro data moved Bitcoin over six months more than any single missile launch.
          Even the June 16 peak at 108,915 dollars coincided with BlackRock reporting 412 million dollars in ETF inflows, which was capital rotation, not conflict premium.Missiles Fly, Yet Bitcoin Holds, Revealing BTC’s Strength in Global Chaos_2

          Bitcoin Price Action 2025 YTD Showing Highs and Low Band vs US Economic News. Source: CoinMarketCap, AP, Reuters, NYT, US FED, AP, Reuters, CNBC, Fox Business, BLS, US FED

          Bitcoin trends historically well in major geopolitical events

          Bitcoin has historically trended positively during periods of geopolitical turmoil. During major events like the US–Iran tensions in 2020, the Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022 and now the Iran–Israel conflict of 2025, Bitcoin has shown upward movement or remarkable price stability. While it does not act like a traditional safe haven, it often behaves like an uncorrelated hedge in systemic uncertainty.
          BlackRock’s 2024 report reinforced this, showing that Bitcoin outperformed the S&P 500 and gold during several past geopolitical shocks. Their chart highlights Bitcoin’s unique behavior during crises: While equities dipped and gold oscillated, Bitcoin frequently trended upward. That pattern did not break in June 2025. It did not surge, but it also did not break the trend.
          That matters in a world desperate for assets that don’t follow the herd.Missiles Fly, Yet Bitcoin Holds, Revealing BTC’s Strength in Global Chaos_3

          S&P 500, gold and Bitcoin Through Major Geopolitical Events. Source: BlackRock Report

          Not immune to war, but not moved by it either

          When Bitcoin moved during the recent Iran-Israel conflict, it did not respond to ideology. It was reacting to liquidation and flow. That is not the same thing. Traders sold into uncertainty.
          Others bought the dip. ETF demand continued. The structure held.
          The recent Iran-Israel conflict headlines tested Bitcoin’s resilience. It was a real-world stress test that did not result in technical breakdown or institutional flight. That’s not bullish in a hyped sense; it’s bullish in a structural sense.
          The asset did not flinch when the world briefly tilted toward catastrophe, but that tilt is far from over. Black swan events can affect all asset classes and provide investors with potential positive entries. Gauging if the news effect will be short, medium or long-lived is a tricky question to answer.

          Source: Cointelegraph

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          You understand and acknowledge that there is a high degree of risk involved in trading. Following any strategies or investment methods may lead to potential losses. The content on the site is provided by our contributors and analysts for information purposes only. You are solely responsible for determining whether any trading assets, securities, strategy, or any other product is suitable for investing based on your own investment objectives and financial situation.
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          How the hell is gold red during the war?

          Adam

          Commodity

          Middle East Situation

          If I had told you that Israel and Iran went to war and escalated that war throughout this past week, I am sure you would have expected gold to have rallied quite strongly. Well, the truth is that gold ended the week lower than where it sat before the start of this war.
          So, if I had told you what the news would be before this past week began, I am quite sure that each and every person who erroneously believes in the mechanical paradigm of our financial markets would assume that gold should have had one of its best weeks in 2025. But, clearly, that was not at all what the market experienced, as we saw the exact opposite action of general expectations. In fact, the market seemed to be quite oblivious to this major war action, and you would never even be able to spot this indication by simply looking at the gold chart. Truthfully, you probably would not even know a major Middle East war was being fought, much less the biggest war in decades is being fought in that region.
          I would like to take this opportunity to remind you of several studies which fly in the face of the commonly accepted mechanical paradigm of the market, which will hopefully help you understand the market action this past week.
          In a 1988 study conducted by Cutler, Poterba, and Summers entitled “What Moves Stock Prices,” they reviewed stock market price action after major economic or other type of news (including major political events) in order to develop a model through which one would be able to predict market moves RETROSPECTIVELY. Yes, you heard me right. They were not even at the stage yet of developing a prospective prediction model.
          However, the study concluded that “[m]acroeconomic news . . . explains only about one fifth of the movements in stock market prices.” In fact, they even noted that “many of the largest market movements in recent years have occurred on days when there were no major news events.” They also concluded that “[t]here is surprisingly small effect [from] big news [of] political developments . . . and international events.” They also suggest that:
          “The relatively small market responses to such news, along with evidence that large market moves often occur on days without any identifiable major news releases casts doubt on the view that stock price movements are fully explicable by news. . . “
          In August 1998, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution published an article by Tom Walker, who conducted his own study of 42 years’ worth of “surprise” news events and the stock market’s corresponding reactions. His conclusion, which will be surprising to most, was that it was exceptionally difficult to identify a connection between market trading and dramatic surprise news. Based upon Walker's study and conclusions, even if you had the news beforehand, you would still not be able to determine the direction of the market only based upon such news.
          In 2008, another study was conducted, in which they reviewed more than 90,000 news items relevant to hundreds of stocks over a two-year period. They concluded that large movements in the stocks were NOT linked to any news items:
          “Most such jumps weren’t directly associated with any news at all, and most news items didn’t cause any jumps.”
          Even though most would try to view the lack of upside market action this past week in gold as an anomaly, these studies make it quite clear that it was much more in line with standard market action than being an anomaly. And, it again leads me to highlight the wise words spoken from one of the best investment books I have ever read – The Socionomic Theory of Finance:
          “Observers’ job, as they see it, is simply to identify which external events caused whatever price changes occur. When news seems to coincide sensibly with market movement, they presume a causal relationship. When news doesn’t fit, they attempt to devise a cause-and-effect structure to make it fit. When they cannot even devise a plausible way to twist the news into justifying market action, they chalk up the market moves to “psychology,” which means that, despite a plethora of news and numerous inventive ways to interpret it, their imaginations aren’t prodigious enough to concoct a credible causal story.
          Most of the time it is easy for observers to believe in news causality. Financial markets fluctuate constantly, and news comes out constantly, and sometimes the two elements coincide well enough to reinforce commentators’ mental bias towards mechanical cause and effect. When news and the market fail to coincide, they shrug and disregard the inconsistency. Those operating under the mechanics paradigm in finance never seem to see or care that these glaring anomalies exist.”
          Allow me to quote further points from this most insightful book.
          “None other than the chairman of the Federal Reserve weighed in on this very topic in testimony before Congress. The morning after a one-day 3.3% swoon in the DJIA in 2007, the nations’ top banker said he could not identify ‘a single trigger’ that caused Tuesdays dramatic drop.” This is a remarkable admission for a macroeconomic mechanist who advocates “financial engineering.” More recently, August 20, 2015 sported the biggest down day in 18 months for stock prices, yet reporters admitted there was a ‘lack of major U.S. economic news’ to explain it.”
          To date, we still debate the cause of the Great Depression, or the October 1987 market crash, the 2010 Flash Crash, the Asian financial crisis, and many other “anomalies” in the market. In 1997, a Nobel-prize-winning economist noted “The truth is that nobody really imagined that something like the Asian financial crisis was possible, and even after the fact there is no consensus about why and how it happened.”
          As Mr. Prechter further appropriately noted in his book: “Can you imagine physicists endlessly debating the cause of avalanches? . . . Economists are mystified over the causes of market declines and economic contractions because they are using a mechanical model in the realm of finance where it doesn’t apply.”
          And, yet, no matter how many times investors see the market react opposite of their general expectations, they still maintain the false beliefs upon which they base those expectations. So, why do we continue to fool ourselves into believing in this clearly erroneous mechanical paradigm as applied by the masses? Well, I believe that Daniel Kahneman, in his book Thinking Fast and Slow, tries to provide an explanation. While there is much depth to his analysis, I am going to try to simplify his perspective in the following quotes and summations:
          We have a puzzling limitation within our minds: “[O]ur excessive confidence in what we believe we know, and our apparent inability to acknowledge the full extent of our ignorance and uncertainty of the world we live in. We are prone to overestimate how much we understand about the world . . overconfidence is fed by the illusory certainty of hindsight.”
          “Contrary to the rules of philosophers of science, who advise testing hypotheses by trying to refute them, people seek data that are likely to be compatible with the beliefs they currently hold. The confirmatory bias [of our minds] favors uncritical acceptance of suggestions and exaggerations of the likelihood of extreme and improbable events . . . [our minds are] not prone to doubt. It suppresses ambiguity and spontaneously constructs stories that are as coherent as possible.”
          Over the years, I have tried to convey this message and direct investors away from mechanical paradigm thinking in order to view markets more objectively, thereby allowing them to increase performance in their investment accounts. But, alas, it has been an uphill battle.
          To this end, I will continue to highlight greater minds than mine. Francis Bacon is one such person who comes to mind. For those that may not be familiar with him, he was a 17th century English philosopher and scientist. He is best known for his philosophical advocacy of the scientific method and is considered the creator of empiricism. His works established and popularized inductive methodologies for scientific inquiry often called the Baconian method.
          I think he also provides insight as to why I have been facing an uphill battle. So, I will now combine the thinking of Kahneman and Bacon to try to explain the reason for my struggle:
          Kahneman: “A reliable way to make people believe in falsehoods is frequent repetition, because familiarity is not easily distinguishable from truth. . . “[E]vidence is that we are born prepared to make intentional attributions.” In other words, our minds engage in an automatic search for causality. Moreover, we also engage in a deliberate search for confirming evidence of those propositions once we hold them dear. This is known as “positive test strategy.”
          And, Francis Bacon concluded something similar centuries before:
          Bacon: “The human understanding when it has once adopted an opinion (either being the received opinion or as being agreeable to itself) draws all things else to support and agree with it.”
          So, as the media continually reinforces the clearly erroneous mechanics paradigm day after day for decades on end, investors have been trained in this false methodology, and have mindlessly adopted it as the absolute in truth. And, as Bacon noted, once it has been adopted as an absolute truth, investors shut out all contrary evidence to this false truth, and this is the reason they simply shrug off empirical evidence, such as what was experienced by this past weeks’ market action. And, now we have a better understanding of Mr. Prechter’s point when he noted that “[t]hose operating under the mechanics paradigm in finance never seem to see or care that these glaring anomalies exist.”
          This now brings me to a quote from Daniel Crosby’s The Behavioral Investor, wherein he noted that “trusting in common myths is what makes you human. But learning not to is what will make you a successful investor.” Which leads me to the more modern work of Benoit Mandelbrot, a French-American mathematician, who outright stated that one cannot reasonably apply an economic mechanic model to the financial markets:
          “From the availability of the multifractal alternative, it follows that, today, economics and finance must be sharply distinguished . . .”
          Hence, you now have the basis and the reasoning as to why we apply Elliott Wave analysis, a fractal-based market analysis system, as our primary market guide. And, this is why I advise all our clients to turn off their televisions and be quite judicious as to what you read when you are making your investment decisions.
          Now, I will tell you that I ignored the news of the day, and simply provided a mathematical analysis to our clients over the past week, which provides a much better guide to understanding and tracking gold than any of the fundamental or news factors which most follow. As you can see from the chart below, I had a resistance box outlined to our clients, which began at 3474 in the gold futures. And, despite the escalation of the Middle East war, I expected gold to turn down at this resistance.
          How the hell is gold red during the war?_1
          As we now know, gold topped within $2 of hitting my target, and has since turned down as we expected, despite the escalation of the war. Now, I am quite sure many of you will attempt some mental gymnastics to explain why gold is now lower than when the war began, but you would simply be fooling yourselves. This is clearly not what you expected from the gold market when a major war was being fought. And, I would like to provide you with two quotes from Ben Franklin to assist you in opening your mind as to how gold really moves:
          “So convenient a thing it is to be a reasonable creature, since it enables one to find or to make a reason for everything one has a mind to do.”
          “Geese are but Geese tho’ we may think ‘em Swans; and Truth will be Truth tho’ it sometimes prove mortifying and distasteful.”
          To those I will also add an insightful quote from another of our forefathers of The United States – John Adams:
          "Facts are stubborn things; and whatever may be our wishes, our inclinations, or the dictates of our passion, they cannot alter the state of facts and evidence."
          So, this leaves all investors with a choice. Either you can continue to track the gold market in the false manner to which you have become accustomed, or you can open your mind to a different path, which has proven through the years to be much more accurate and insightful as to the machinations of the gold price through its upside and downside cycles.
          To that end, I want to reiterate an expectation I maintain. As long as that resistance box that you see on the chart above holds as resistance, I am expecting a larger decline to take shape, which will likely be our next buying opportunity in the gold market. But, I will warn you that this will lead to what I believe is the final rally in the cycle which began at the end of 2015, when gold bottomed in the $1,050 region, which we also called at that time.
          In fact, one of my long-term clients posted this in our trading room at Elliottwavetrader.net this past Thursday:
          “For those that have been here long enough. Anyone remember this post [by Avi]:
          ‘If many of you follow us on metals and miners, I think we will likely generate more millionaires on this site than any other over the next 10 years. Yea, I know I am sounding crazy, but this stuff is the best set up I have seen in my life.’
          Why I think Avi is the GOAT with metals. He said in 10 years, it’s almost 11 years since his post and nearly 10 years since we bottomed in metals.”
          And, for those wondering about the my shorter term outlook, I would like to see the GLD price drop down to at least the 275GLD region for the next buying opportunity. We will adjust as needed based upon the action we see in the coming few weeks. But, for now, that is the set up that I am seeking to develop.
          In conclusion, while I certainly provide analysis to our almost 9000 members and 1000 money manager clients at Elliottwavetradet.net, I also encourage investors to think independently and test what you are told through a prism of truth and history. Much of what you read and are told through your media of choice usually presents noise which often has you looking the wrong way in the financial market you track. It is time to take a more mature and accurate approach to financial markets, which will assist every investor’s goal – increasing the value of your investment account.

          source :kitco

          Risk Warnings and Disclaimers
          You understand and acknowledge that there is a high degree of risk involved in trading. Following any strategies or investment methods may lead to potential losses. The content on the site is provided by our contributors and analysts for information purposes only. You are solely responsible for determining whether any trading assets, securities, strategy, or any other product is suitable for investing based on your own investment objectives and financial situation.
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          Iranian State Sources Warn Retaliation On US Bases Coming In Next 'Hours'

          Thomas

          Political

          Iranian state media sources are reporting that Iran is likely to attack US military facilities in the Mideast region 'in the coming hours'.

          There are an estimated 40,000 American troops throughout the whole region, including at bases and on warships in the CENTCOM area of responsibility.

          On Sunday the NY Times had cited US officials to say anonymous US military and intelligence officials had detected signs that Iran-backed groups are preparing hostile action against US forces in places like Syria and Iraq. There's also the possibility of direct Iranian ballistic missile launches on bases in Iraq, just as happened in the wake of Soleimani's assassination during the first Trump administration.

          But is this response being telegraphed or even coordinated with the US so as to avoid uncontrollable escalation? Israeli journalist Amit Segal reports:

          Senior Israeli officials assess that Iran will, in one way or another, coordinate its attack on the United States — similar to how it acted following the assassination of Qassem Soleimani. This is intended to avoid an unplanned escalation and out of hope to contain the incident. Perhaps in this context come the reports suggesting that the U.S. already knows the attack will take place within the next 48 hours.

          Iranian missile and drone attacks on Israel started out fierce and sustained, but have waned in the last days. Tehran is not expected to go after US assets with such intensity, fearing that Washington could launch a full war of regime change targeting the Ayatollah.

          White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt has said in a fresh interview that the US administration is 'confident' that Saturday’s bombings of three key Iranian nuclear sites accomplished the job of dismantling Tehran’s alleged nuclear ambitions. She also said Trump made the decision "based on his own instincts and the US intelligence that he saw."

          "This strike on Saturday did make our homeland safer because it took away Iran’s ability to create a nuclear bomb. This is a regime that threatens ‘death to America,’ and ‘death to Israel, and they no longer have the capability to build this nuclear weapon and threaten the world," she told ABC News on Monday morning while making media rounds.

          At a moment White House officials have been trying to downplay that this is a conflict of regime change in Iran, Leavitt did say the US is seeking to "Take away the power of this incredibly violent regime."

          Fordow, Isfahan and Natanz were hit with huge bunker-buster bombs over the weekend, after which President Trump late Sunday declared on Truth Social: “Monumental Damage was done to all Nuclear sites in Iran, as shown by satellite images. Obliteration is an accurate term!”

          However, UN inspectors at the IAEA currently have no access to the impacted sites of Fordow, Isfahan and Natanz - and the country remains essentially a warzone, also with airspace closed- as the region braces for potential Iranian response against US bases and assets. And of course, satellites can't assess damage underground, where the enrichment facilities and stockpiles are located.

          Press Secretary on FOX: "why shouldn't the Iranian people take away the power of this incredibly violent regime?"

          Also interesting is that Leavitt repeated the US administration talking point that the intel on Iran that Trump was provided made clear that Iran was 'weeks' from a nuclear weapon.

          It remains that once again the American people are being led into supporting another US war and quagmire in the Middle East based on 'trust us!' from this administration, citing vague 'intel reports' on WMD, which sounds suspiciously like the faulty Bush-Cheney case against Saddam Hussein.

          Still, the White House official narrative remains that Trump is not seeking full regime change in Iran, and this is also how Israeli media is presenting it in recent headlines:

          “The President’s posture and our military posture has not changed,” White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt tells reporters.

          “The president was simply raising a question that I think many people around the world are asking: if the Iranian regime refuses to give up its nuclear program or engage in talks… if they refuse to engage in diplomacy moving forward, why shouldn’t the Iranian people rise up against this brutal terrorist regime?”

          So we are already in the 'Iranian people should rise up' phase of this war.

          Below are all the latest headlines and developments of the last 24-48 hours...

          Israel-Iran Latest Highlights

          • US President Trump confirmed the launch of “Operation Midnight Hammer”, which involved targeted strikes on Iran’s nuclear facilities at Fordow, Natanz, and Isfahan. The operation used 125 aircraft, including seven B-2 bombers, alongside submarine-launched Tomahawk cruise missiles. Fourteen GBU-57 Massive Ordnance Penetrators ("bunker busters") were deployed to penetrate deeply buried targets, notably Fordow.
          • Satellite imagery shows significant damage at all facilities. Trump described it as a joint effort with Israel.
          • IAEA say the damage assessment is pending; no signs of radiation leak.
          • In retaliation, Iran's parliament has approved the closure of the Strait of Hormuz after the US launched strikes against the country’s nuclear facilities. Iran’s security body will make the final decision on whether to proceed with the plan, state television reported.
          • Iran retaliated by missile strikes on Israel. Has said future action could target over 20 US bases or naval assets. Iran's Military Central Command says powerful operations with heavy consequences for the US are to be expected. US entering the conflict expands the list of legitimate targets for Iran.
          • The European morning has seen a slew of geopolitical updates (see section below). Some additional USD strength on: an Iranian provincial official says Israel is targeting the Fordow nuclear facility, via Tasnim. Israel struck Fordow's access road, to prevent certain elements from approaching the area, according to Journalist Stein.
          • Iran's Military Central Command says powerful operations with heavy consequences for the US are to be expected. US entering the conflict expands the list of legitimate targets for Iran.
          • Iran's Army Chief says they are now free to take action against US interests, via IRNA.
          • Iranian city Karaj has been targeted by Israeli missiles, according to Fars; reports of large explosions being heard in Tehran.
          • Russian Kremlin says President Putin will receive the Iranian Foreign Minister later today. Communication channels remain open with the US, a call between US President Trump and Putin can be "quickly organised if required"; no current plans for a call. Iran can share its proposals later today.

          US Strike Operations

          • US President Trump confirmed the launch of “Operation Midnight Hammer”, which involved targeted strikes on Iran’s nuclear facilities at Fordow, Natanz, and Isfahan. The operation used 125 aircraft, including seven B-2 bombers, alongside submarine-launched Tomahawk cruise missiles.
          • Fourteen GBU-57 Massive Ordnance Penetrators ("bunker busters") were deployed to penetrate deeply buried targets, notably Fordow.
          • Satellite imagery confirmed significant infrastructure damage at all three nuclear sites, with Fordow showing six fresh craters.
          • All targets were reportedly struck between 23:40 BST (Saturday) and 00:05 BST (Sunday). Iran’s air defence systems failed to detect or intercept the incoming attacks.
          • Trump described the attack as a joint effort with Israel, saying they “worked as a team like perhaps no team has ever worked before.”
          • Axios quoted officials as saying that Whitkov told Araqchi during the operation that “the strike is only once.” He confirmed that Washington was still seeking a diplomatic solution and wanted Tehran to return to negotiations.
          • US President Trump did not want to continue striking Iran, but he would do so if US bases were targeted, according to Sky News Arabia citing Axios.
          • US President Trump reportedly directed staff to announce a two-week window in order to conceal plans for the Iran attack, according to CNN sources.

          Damage Assessment & Nuclear Risk

          • IAEA Director General Grossi said craters are visible at Fordow, Natanz suffered direct hits, and tunnel entrances at Isfahan were struck. Full underground damage assessment remains pending. A special IAEA board meeting is scheduled for Monday.
          • Chairman of the Joint Chiefs Gen. Dan Caine stated it is “too early” to assess whether Iran’s nuclear capability was fully neutralised.
          • US intelligence officials have raised concerns Iran may have relocated enriched uranium stockpiles in advance.
          • US Secretary of State Rubio urged Iran to surrender its enriched uranium stockpiles, claiming they remain buried under Isfahan and likely were not moved before the strikes.
          • The IAEA reported no signs of a radiation leak. Saudi Arabia’s Nuclear and Radiological Regulatory Authority confirmed no radioactive effects were detected in Gulf states.

          Strait of Hormuz & Oil Flow Threat

          • The Iranian parliament has approved the closure of the Strait of Hormuz after the US launched strikes against the country’s nuclear facilities. Iran’s security body will make the final decision on whether to proceed with the plan, state television reported.
          • US Secretary of State Rubio warned such a move would be “economic suicide” for Iran but remains a credible escalation vector.
          • NOTE: Market contacts have suggested OPEC+ have not had any calls, with no talks of an emergency meeting yet amid no signs of supply disruptions, yet.

          Iranian Military Response

          • Iran launched retaliatory missile strikes on Tel Aviv and Haifa, Israel, resulting in at least 86 reported injuries.
          • Iranian officials have warned that future actions could target over 20 US bases or naval assets in the region.
          • Iran stated that its military would determine the timing, nature, and scale of its response, according to Reuters.
          • Signs have emerged of Iran‑backed militias preparing to attack US bases in Iraq and Syria, according to Sky News Arabia citing The New York Times.
          • Iranian air defences reportedly activated in Isfahan, targeting hostile Israeli aircraft.
          • Iranian forces reported that Israeli airstrikes killed nine personnel — seven Revolutionary Guards and two conscripts — in Yazd province.

          Iranian Messaging

          • Iran is weighing its response — with its Foreign Minister saying “all options” are on the table after Washington proved “they only understand the language of threat and force”, according to CNN.
          • Supreme Leader Khamenei warned that US strikes would “result in irreparable damage” to the US.
          • Iran’s President Pezeshkian warned of a “more devastating” retaliation if Israel’s bombing campaign continued.
          • Iranian regime sources denied any major nuclear material loss from the strikes, implying the sites had been pre-emptively evacuated.
          • Iran’s Crisis Management HQ stated there was “no danger” to civilians near Fordow; state media reported the site had “long been evacuated.”
          • An adviser to Khamenei claimed Iran still retains its enriched uranium, indigenous nuclear knowledge, and political will, despite facility damage.
          • Iran’s Foreign Minister condemned the strikes as a violation of international law and the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.
          • The Iranian Atomic Energy Organisation called the attacks “a barbaric act” breaching international law.

          International Reactions

          • The UN Security Council held an emergency meeting at 20:00 BST on Sunday in response to the strikes. US Ambassador Dorothy Shea defended the operation; China, Russia, and Pakistan called for an immediate ceasefire and accused the US of breaching the UN Charter.
          • The UN and EU called for de-escalation, with Secretary-General António Guterres warning of a “dangerous escalation.”
          • The E3 (UK, France, Germany) released a joint statement urging Iran to return to nuclear negotiations and warning against further destabilising actions.
          • Gulf Arab states including Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and Kuwait condemned the US strikes, calling for restraint and diplomatic resolution.
          • UK PM Keir Starmer backed the US strike, describing it as a response to a “grave threat.”
          • Israeli PM Netanyahu praised the US action, calling it a display of “awesome and righteous might” that could “change history.”
          • Saudi Arabia, Oman, and India expressed concern and urged all sides to pursue diplomatic solutions.

          US Political & Legal Fallout

          • Congressional response to the strikes was mixed. Most Republicans expressed support, with Senator Ted Cruz praising the operation. However, some dissent emerged within the party, notably from Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene, who stated, “Not our fight.” Democrats strongly criticised the move; Senator Bernie Sanders labelled it “grossly unconstitutional” and accused President Trump of bypassing Congress.
          • US Department of Justice said President Trump had the authority under Article II to order Iran strikes without congressional approval, but a prolonged conflict might require Congress’s involvement, according to CNN.
          • US President Trump to meet with National Security team at 13:00 EDT/18:00 BST on Monday, according to Bloomberg.

          Trump on Truth Social

          • US President Trump posted on Sunday "The damage to the Nuclear sites in Iran is said to be “monumental.” The hits were hard and accurate. Great skill was shown by our military. " Trump added that "if the current Iranian Regime is unable to MAKE IRAN GREAT AGAIN, why wouldn’t there be a Regime change", and that "The GREAT B-2 pilots have just landed, safely, in Missouri."
          • President Trump later posted "Monumental Damage was done to all Nuclear sites in Iran, as shown by satellite images. Obliteration is an accurate term!... The biggest damage took place far below ground level. Bullseye!!!"

          US Homeland Security & Domestic Threats

          • The US is on high alert for Iranian-backed terrorist attacks, especially in the 48 hours following the strike. FBI, DHS, and local law enforcement have increased security presence at places of worship in major cities including New York and Washington, DC.
          • DHS warned of a heightened domestic threat environment, including potential for cyberattacks or lone-wolf incidents inspired by religious rulings.
          • The White House is monitoring potential Iranian sleeper cells inside the US.
          • VP Vance stated the administration is watching known terror watch list individuals who entered during the Biden era.

          Regional Axis Responses/Headlines

          • Iranian Foreign Minister Araghchi arrived in Moscow to consult with President Putin. Russia condemned the US strikes as a “flagrant violation of international law.”
          • Iran's Foreign Minister Araqchi said he would discuss tackling common challenges and threats with Russian President Putin, according to Iranian news agency SNN.
          • Hezbollah condemned the US strikes, calling them a violation of international and humanitarian law and warned the conflict could spiral globally.
          • A Yemeni Houthi official warned retaliation for the US attack was “only a matter of time.”

          Source: Zero Hedge

          Risk Warnings and Disclaimers
          You understand and acknowledge that there is a high degree of risk involved in trading. Following any strategies or investment methods may lead to potential losses. The content on the site is provided by our contributors and analysts for information purposes only. You are solely responsible for determining whether any trading assets, securities, strategy, or any other product is suitable for investing based on your own investment objectives and financial situation.
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          EURUSD Buyers Defend 1.1445 Support And Reverse Higher. EURUSD Retests Friday High

          Blue River

          Forex

          Technical Analysis

          EURUSD technicals

          After a soft European open, an early rally in the Asian session saw the EURUSD stall at the 200-hour MA (≈ 1.1518) and slipped under the 100-hour line (1.1496). Dip-buyers on the 2nd move lower on the day, stepped in just ahead of last week’s swing floor at 1.1445, marking another successful defense of that level (see green numbered circles).

          Fresh USD selling followed dovish remarks from Fed Governor Bowman—echoing Waller’s “July cut” hint from Friday—while calmer headlines out of the Middle East nudged Treasury yields lower. The pair powered back above both hourly averages and is now poking at Friday’s peak near 1.1543. A clean break would confirm the intraday bullish reversal and target swing highs from the last few weeks at 1.1578, 1.1614 and the high for the year (and going back to 2021) at 1.16297.

          Conversely, a failure to hold the dual-MA band (1.1518-1.1496) would hand momentum back to sellers and refocus attention on 1.1466 and the pivotal 1.1445 floor.

          Key technical levels

          Resistance:

          ● 1.1543 – Friday / day high

          ● 1.1578 – 24 May swing cap

          ● 1.1614 – high from June 16

          ● 1.16297 - high for the year and going back to 2021

          Support:

          ● 1.1518 – 200-hour MA

          ● 1.1496 – 100-hour MA

          ● 1.1445– swing level (green circles)

          ● 1.1416 – 38.2% retracement level

          Bias stays tilted higher while EURUSD holds above the 1.1518-1.1496 zone.

          Source: ForexLive

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